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My 581 series Mini performed identically to my Swiss Arms with standard Federal ammo.
I have one pe90 . but today , i sold this thing, to buy 4 mini.... it' s the same thing anyway
STOP SMOKING !
My 581 series Mini performed identically to my Swiss Arms with standard Federal ammo.
That all you've got to contribute? A stupid cartoon? I take it you don't actually own either a Mini or a Swiss Arms yourself, so that you can provide your own personal comparison of two from side-by-side use, as Ardent just did?
As I understand it, Ardent is saying that, from his personal ownership and use of the two rifles, his experience is that if the reason you want a self-loading .223 rifle is for carting around your farm to shoot coyotes at 250-300m, you will probably find a $900 Ruger as useful and enjoyable to use as a $2000+ Swiss Arms. You got a problem with that?
Ardent, I value your posts, counting you as one of the most intelligent and articulate members here, one who walks the walk. Did the Mini's groupings meet the PE90s? If so, that should give cause to many members here to give more consideration to the Ruger rifle.
I hope some can recognize the heavy anti-Mini bias, entirely hogwash, that has been perpetuated here for almost ten years now. If it was just introduced we'd be running at a sub-$1000 stainless semi from a quality maker in three chamberings. It is however, old hat, boring, and functional so it takes a lot of slag. I tend to defend the Mini aggressively and offensively, so for any slight in doing so my true apologies.
I think the move was to keep retoolimg costs at a minimum and add the least weight possible while getting an improvement. A lot of it was doubtless cosmetic much as I hate to say it,
When they reintroduced the Mini, Ruger did botch it up, considering what they could have done, I was quite disappointed... Not that it isn't a good working gun ( I had the target version ) but when you retool a product, that is the right time to make any improvements. The barrel was thickened in certain areas, but what should have happened was the gas block being reconfigured to take a thicker barrel, and a heavier barrel throughout its length incorporated... Accuracy Systems has been changing them out for years...why not make that change at the factory? Missed opportunity? Maybe, but considering that dealers have a hard time keeping them in stock, maybe they know their majority customer base better than I...
I also thought that Ruger made the barrels to only shoot American spec 7.62x39(.308 diam bullets)ammo instead of the cheap surplus 7.62x39(.311 diam bullets). I'm not sure but maybe someone else that has one can chime in.
This rifle is chambered for the 7.62 x 39mm cartridge. This cartridge, traditionally, uses a projectile with a nominal diameter of .311 to .312 inch.
At the time the Mini Thirty was introduced very few bullet makers where producing .311/.312 inch bullets for reloading in the light 125-130 grain weight required. Ruger initiated the use of barrels with a groove dimension of .308 inch and a long tapered throat. The throat allowed the use of ammunition with .311/.312 projectiles by gradually “squeezing” them to the .308 diameter. In addition, ammunition loaded with more commonly available .308 diameter bullets could also be used.
Commencing in 1992 Ruger initiated a change to using .311/.312 nominal groove diameter, 1-10 inch right hand twist barrels in all Mini Thirties. It was likely well into 1993 before all rifles coming of the production line incorporated the .311/.312 barrels.
I thought the target model, with harmonic stabilizer, addressed these issues?
14 pages in this thread and no one has mentioned that the A-Team couldn't hit #### with the Mini-14. That's not much of an endorsement.



























